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THE FIRST GENERAL EPISTLE OF
JOHN
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
CHAPTER 5
@1Jo
5:1-21. WHO
ARE THE BRETHREN
ESPECIALLY TO
BE LOVED
(@1Jo
4:21); OBEDIENCE, THE
TEST OF LOVE,
EASY THROUGH
FAITH, WHICH
OVERCOMES THE
WORLD. LAST
PORTION OF THE
EPISTLE. THE
SPIRIT'S WITNESS
TO THE BELIEVER'S
SPIRITUAL LIFE.
TRUTHS REPEATED
AT THE CLOSE:
FAREWELL WARNING.
1. Reason why our "brother"
(@1Jo
4:21) is entitled to such love, namely, because
he is "born (begotten) of God": so that if we want to show
our love to God, we must show it to God's visible
representative.
Whosoever--Greek, "Everyone that." He
could not be our "Jesus" (God-Saviour) unless He were "the
Christ"; for He could not reveal the way of salvation,
except He were a prophet: He could not work out
that salvation, except He were a priest: He could
not confer that salvation upon us, except He were a
king: He could not be prophet, priest, and
king, except He were the Christ [PEARSON,
Exposition of the Creed].
born--Translate, "begotten," as in the latter
part of the verse, the Greek being the same. Christ
is the "only-begotten Son" by generation; we become
begotten sons of God by regeneration and adoption.
every one that loveth him that begat--sincerely,
not in mere profession (@1Jo
4:20).
loveth him also that is begotten of him--namely,
"his brethren" (@1Jo
4:21).
2. By--Greek, "In."
As our love to the brethren is the sign and test of
our love to God, so (John here says) our love to
God (tested by our "keeping his commandments") is,
conversely, the ground and only true basis of love to
our brother.
we know--John means here, not the outward
criteria of genuine brotherly love, but the inward
spiritual criteria of it, consciousness of love to
God manifested in a hearty keeping of His
commandments. When we have this inwardly and outwardly
confirmed love to God, we can know assuredly
that we truly love the children of God. "Love to
one's brother is prior, according to the order of
nature (see on 1Jo 4:20); love to God is so,
according to the order of grace (@1Jo
5:2). At one time the former is more immediately
known, at another time the latter, according as the mind
is more engaged in human relations or in what concerns the
divine honor" [ESTIUS].
John shows what true love is, namely, that which is
referred to God as its first object. As previously John
urged the effect, so now he urges the cause. For he wishes
mutual love to be so cultivated among us, as that God
should always be placed first [CALVIN].
3. this is--the love
of God consists in this.
not grievous--as so many think them. It is
"the way of the transgressor" that "is hard." What makes
them to the regenerate "not grievous," is faith
which "overcometh the world" (@1Jo
5:4):in proportion as faith is strong, the
grievousness of God's commandments to the rebellious flesh
is overcome. The reason why believers feel any degree of
irksomeness in God's commandments is, they do not realize
fully by faith the privileges of their spiritual life.
4. For--(See on 1Jo 5:3).
The reason why "His commandments are not grievous." Though
there is a conflict in keeping them, the sue for the whole
body of the regenerate is victory over every opposing
influence; meanwhile there is a present joy to each
believer in keeping them which makes them "not grievous."
whatsoever--Greek, "all that is
begotten of God." The neuter expresses the universal
whole, or aggregate of the regenerate, regarded
as one collective body @Joh
3:6 6:37,39, "where BENGEL
remarks, that in Jesus' discourses, what the Father has
given Him is called, in the singular number and neuter
gender, all whatsoever; those who come to the
Son are described in the masculine gender and plural
number, they all, or singular, every one.
The Father has given, as it were, the whole mass to the
Son, that all whom He gave may be one whole: that
universal whole the Son singly evolves, in the
execution of the divine plan."
overcometh--habitually.
the world--all that is opposed to keeping the
commandments of God, or draws us off from God, in this
world, including our corrupt flesh, on which the
world's blandishments or threats act, as also including
Satan, the prince of this world (@Joh
12:31 14:30 16:11).
this is the victory that overcometh--Greek
aorist, ". . . that hath (already) overcome
the world": the victory (where faith is)
hereby is implied as having been already obtained
(@1Jo
2:13 4:4).
5. Who--"Who" else
"but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God:" "the
Christ" (@1Jo
5:1)? Confirming, by a triumphant question defying all
contradiction, as an undeniable fact, @1Jo
5:4, that the victory which overcomes the world
is faith. For it is by believing: that we
are made one with Jesus the Son of God, so that we
partake of His victory over the world, and have
dwelling in us One greater than he who is in the world (@1Jo
4:4). "Survey the whole world, and show me even one of
whom it can be affirmed with truth that he overcomes the
world, who is not a Christian, and endowed with this
faith" [EPISCOPIUS
in ALFORD].
6. This--the Person
mentioned in @1Jo
5:5. This Jesus.
he that came by water and blood--"by water,"
when His ministry was inaugurated by baptism in the
Jordan, and He received the Father's testimony to His
Messiahship and divine Sonship. Compare @1Jo
5:5, "believeth that Jesus is the Son of God,"
with @Joh
1:33,34, "The Spirit . . . remaining on Him . . . I
saw and bare record that this is the Son of God";
and @1Jo
5:8, below, "there are three that bear witness
in earth, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood."
Corresponding to this is the baptism of water and the
Spirit which He has instituted as a standing seal and
mean of initiatory incorporation with Him.
and blood--He came by "the blood of His
cross" (so "by" is used, @Heb
9:12: "by," that is, with, "His own blood He
entered in once into the holy place"): a fact seen
and so solemnly witnessed to by John. "These two
past facts in the Lord's life are this abiding
testimony to us, by virtue of the permanent
application to us of their cleansing and atoning power."
Jesus Christ--not a mere appellation, but a
solemn assertion of the Lord's Person and Messiahship.
not by, &c.--Greek, "not
IN the water
only, but IN
the water and IN
(so oldest manuscripts add) the blood." As "by"
implies the mean through, or with, which He
came: so "in," the element in which He came.
"The" implies that the water and the blood
were sacred and well-known symbols. John Baptist came only
baptizing with water, and therefore was not the
Messiah. Jesus came first to undergo Himself the
double baptism of water and blood, and then to baptize us
with the Spirit-cleansing, of which water is the
sacramental seal, and with His atoning blood, the
efficacy of which, once for all shed, is perpetual in the
Church; and therefore is the Messiah. It was His
shed blood which first gave water baptism
its spiritual significancy. We are baptized into His
death: the grand point of union between us and Him,
and, through Him, between us and God.
it is the Spirit, &c.--The Holy Spirit
is an additional witness (compare @1Jo
5:7), besides the water and the blood,
to Jesus' Sonship and Messiahship. The
Spirit attested these truths at Jesus' baptism by
descending on Him, and throughout His ministry by enabling
Him to speak and do what man never before or since has
spoken or, done; and "it is the Spirit that beareth
witness" of Christ, now permanently in the Church: both in
the inspired New Testament Scriptures, and in the hearts
of believers, and in the spiritual reception of baptism
and the Lord's Supper.
because the Spirit is truth--It is His
essential truth which gives His witness such
infallible authority.
7. three--Two or three
witnesses were required by law to constitute adequate
testimony. The only Greek manuscripts in any
form which support the words, "in heaven, the Father,
the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one; and
there are three that bear witness in earth," are the
Montfortianus of Dublin, copied evidently from the
modern Latin Vulgate; the Ravianus, copied from
the Complutensian Polyglot; a manuscript at Naples,
with the words added in the Margin by a recent
hand; Ottobonianus, 298, of the fifteenth century,
the Greek of which is a mere translation of the
accompanying Latin. All the old versions omit the
words. The oldest manuscripts of the Vulgate omit
them: the earliest Vulgate manuscript which has
them being Wizanburgensis, 99, of the eighth
century. A scholium quoted in Matthæi, shows that
the words did not arise from fraud; for in the words, in
all Greek manuscripts "there are three that
bear record," as the Scholiast notices, the word "three"
is masculine, because the three things (the
Spirit, the water, and the blood) are
SYMBOLS OF THE TRINITY.
To this CYPRIAN,
196, also refers, "Of the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit, it is written, 'And these three are
one' (a unity)." There must be some mystical truth implied
in using "three" (Greek) in the
masculine, though the antecedents, "Spirit, water, and
blood," are neuter. That THE
TRINITY was
the truth meant is a natural inference: the triad
specified pointing to a still Higher Trinity; as is plain
also from @1Jo
5:9, "the witness of GOD,"
referring to the Trinity alluded to in the Spirit,
water, and blood. It was therefore first written as a
marginal comment to complete the sense of the text,
and then, as early at least as the eighth century, was
introduced into the text of the Latin Vulgate. The
testimony, however, could only be borne on earth to
men, not in heaven. The marginal comment,
therefore, that inserted "in heaven," was inappropriate.
It is on earth that the context evidently requires
the witness of the three, the Spirit, the water,
and the blood, to be borne: mystically setting
forth the divine triune witnesses, the Father, the
Spirit, and the Son. LUECKE
notices as internal evidence against the words, John never
uses "the Father" and "the Word" as correlates, but, like
other New Testament writers, associates "the Son" with
"the Father," and always refers "the Word" to "God" as its
correlate, not "the Father." Vigilius, at the end of the
fifth century, is the first who quotes the disputed words
as in the text; but no Greek manuscript earlier
than the fifteenth is extant with them. The term
"Trinity" occurs first in the third century in TERTULLIAN
[Against Praxeas, 3].
8. agree in one--"tend unto
one result"; their agreeing testimony to Jesus' Sonship
and Messiahship they give by the sacramental grace in the
water of baptism, received by the penitent
believer, by the atoning efficacy of His blood, and
by the internal witness of His Spirit (@1Jo
5:10):answering to the testimony given to Jesus'
Sonship and Messiahship by His baptism, His crucifixion,
and the Spirit's manifestations in Him (see on 1Jo 5:6).
It was by His coming by water (that is, His baptism
in Jordan) that Jesus was solemnly inaugurated in office,
and revealed Himself as Messiah; this must have been
peculiarly important in John's estimation, who was first
led to Christ by the testimony of the Baptist. By the
baptism then received by Christ, and by His redeeming
blood-shedding, and by that which the Spirit of God,
whose witness is infallible, has effected, and still
effects, by Him, the Spirit, the water, and
the blood, unite, as the threefold witness, to
verify His divine Messiahship [NEANDER].
9. If, &c.--We do accept
(and rightly so) the witness of veracious men, fallible
though they be; much more ought we to accept the
infallible witness of God (the Father). "The testimony of
the Father is, as it were, the basis of the testimony of
the Word and of the Holy Spirit; just as the testimony of
the Spirit is, as it were, the basis of the
testimony of the water and the blood" [BENGEL].
for--This principle applies in the present
case, FOR
which--in the oldest manuscripts, "because
He hath given testimony concerning His Son." What that
testimony is we find above in @1Jo
5:1,5, "Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God"; and
below in @1Jo
5:10,11.
10. hath the witness--of
God, by His Spirit (@1Jo
5:8).
in himself--God's Spirit dwelling in him and
witnessing that "Jesus is the Lord," "the Christ,"
and "the Son of God" (@1Jo
5:1,5). The witness of the Spirit in the
believer himself to his own sonship is not here
expressed, but follows as a consequence of believing the
witness of God to Jesus' divine Sonship.
believeth not God--credits not His
witness.
made him a liar--a consequence which many who
virtually, or even avowedly, do not believe, may well
startle back from as fearful blasphemy and presumption (@1Jo
1:10).
believeth not the record--Greek,
"believeth not IN the record, or witness." Refusal
to credit God's testimony ("believeth not God") is
involved in refusal to believe
IN (to rest one's
trust in) Jesus Christ, the object of God's record
or testimony. "Divine "faith" is an assent unto
something as credible upon the testimony of God. This is
the highest kind of faith; because the object hath
the highest credibility, because grounded upon the
testimony of God, which is infallible" [PEARSON,
Exposition of the Creed]. "The authority on which
we believe is divine; the doctrine which we follow is
divine" [LEO].
gave--Greek, "hath testified, and now
testifies."
of--concerning.
11. hath given--Greek,
aorist: "gave" once for all. Not only "promised"
it.
life is in his Son--essentially (@Joh
1:4 11:25 14:6); bodily (@Col
2:9); operatively (@2Ti
1:10) [LANGE
in ALFORD].
It is in the second Adam, the Son of God, that this
life is secured to us, which, if left to depend on us,
we should lose, like the first Adam.
12. the Son . . . life--Greek,
"THE life." BENGEL
remarks, The verse has two clauses: in the former the Son
is mentioned without the addition "of God," for believers
know the Son: in the second clause the addition "of
God" is made, that unbelievers may know thereby what a
serious thing it is not to have Him. In the former clause
"has" bears the emphasis; in the second, life. To
have the Son is to be able to say as the bride, "I
am my Beloved's, and my Beloved is mine" [@So
6:3]. Faith is the mean whereby the regenerate
HAVE Christ
as a present possession, and in having Him have
life in its germ and reality now, and shall have life
in its fully developed manifestation hereafter. Eternal
life here is: (1) initial, and is an earnest of
that which is to follow; in the intermediate state (2)
partial, belonging but to a part of a man, though that
is his nobler part, the soul separated from the body; at
and after the resurrection (3) perfectional. This
life is not only natural, consisting of the union of the
soul and the body (as that of the reprobate in eternal
pain, which ought to be termed death eternal, not
life), but also spiritual, the union of the soul to
God, and supremely blessed for ever (for life is
another term for happiness) [PEARSON,
Exposition of the Creed].
13. The oldest manuscripts
and versions read, "These things have I written unto you
[omitting 'that believe on the name of the Son of God']
that ye may know that ye have eternal life (compare @1Jo
5:11), THOSE
(of you I mean) WHO
believe (not as English Version reads, 'and that
ye may believe') on the name of the Son of God."
English Version, in the latter clause, will mean,
"that ye may continue to believe," &c. (compare @1Jo
5:12).
These things--This Epistle. He, towards the
close of his Gospel (@Joh
20:30,31), wrote similarly, stating his purpose in
having written. In @1Jo
1:4 he states the object of his writing this Epistle
to be, "that your joy may be full." To "know that we
have eternal life" is the sure way to "joy in God."
14. the confidence--boldness
(@1Jo
4:17) in prayer, which results from knowing that we
have eternal life (@1Jo
5:13 1Jo 3:19,22).
according to his will--which is the
believer's will, and which is therefore no restraint to
his prayers. In so far as God's will is not our will, we
are not abiding in faith, and our prayers are not
accepted. ALFORD
well says, If we knew God's will thoroughly, and
submitted to it heartily, it would be impossible for
us to ask anything for the spirit or for the body which He
should not perform; it is this ideal state which the
apostle has in view. It is the Spirit who teaches
us inwardly, and Himself in us asks according to the will
of God.
15. hear--Greek,
"that He heareth us."
we have the petitions that we desired of him--We
have, as present possessions, everything whatsoever
we desired (asked) from Him. Not one of
our past prayers offered in faith, according to
His will, is lost. Like Hannah, we can rejoice over
them as granted even before the event; and can recognize
the event when it comes to pass, as not from chance, but
obtained by our past prayers. Compare also Jehoshaphat's
believing confidence in the issue of his prayers, so much
so that he appointed singers to praise the Lord
beforehand.
16. If any . . . see--on
any particular occasion; Greek aorist.
his brother--a fellow Christian.
sin a sin--in the act of sinning, and
continuing in the sin: present.
not unto death--provided that it is not
unto death.
he shall give--The asker shall be the
means, by his intercessory prayer, of God giving
life to the sinning brother. Kindly reproof ought to
accompany his intercessions. Life was in process of
being forfeited by the sinning brother when the believer's
intercession obtained its restoration.
for them--resuming the proviso put forth in
the beginning of the verse. "Provided that the sin is not
unto death." "Shall give life," I say, to, that is,
obtain life "for (in the case of) them that sin not
unto death."
I do not say that he shall pray for it--The
Greek for "pray" means a
REQUEST as of one on an equality, or
at least on terms of familiarity, with him from whom the
favor is sought. "The Christian intercessor for his
brethren, John declares, shall not assume the authority
which would be implied in making request for a sinner who
has sinned the sin unto death (@1Sa
15:35 16:1 Mr 3:29), that it might be forgiven him" [TRENCH,
Greek Synonyms of the New Testament]. Compare @De
3:26. Greek "ask" implies the humble petition
of an inferior; so that our Lord never uses it, but always
uses (Greek) "request." Martha, from ignorance,
once uses "ask" in His case (@Joh
11:22). "Asking" for a brother sinning not unto death,
is a humble petition in consonance with God's will. To
"request" for a sin unto death [intercede, as it were,
authoritatively for it, as though we were more
merciful than God] would savor of presumption; prescribing
to God in a matter which lies out of the bounds of our
brotherly yearning (because one sinning unto death would
thereby be demonstrated not to be, nor ever to have been,
truly a brother, @1Jo
2:19), how He shall inflict and withhold His righteous
judgments. Jesus Himself intercedes, not for the world
which hardens itself in unbelief, but for those given to
Him out of the world.
17. "Every unrighteousness
(even that of believers, compare @1Jo
1:9 3:4. Every coming short of right) is sin";
(but) not every sin is the sin unto death.
and there is a sin not unto death--in the
case of which, therefore, believers may intercede.
Death and life stand in correlative opposition
(@1Jo
5:11-13). The sin unto death must be one
tending "towards" (so the Greek), and so resulting
in, death. ALFORD
makes it to be an appreciable ACT of sin, namely, the
denying Jesus to be the Christ, the Son of God (in
contrast to confess this truth, @1Jo
5:1,5), @1Jo
2:19,22 4:2,3 5:10. Such wilful deniers of Christ are
not to be received into one's house, or wished "God
speed." Still, I think with BENGEL,
not merely the act, but also the state of
apostasy accompanying the act, is included--a
"state of soul in which faith, love, and hope, in short,
the new life, is extinguished. The chief commandment is
faith and love. Therefore, the chief sin is
that by which faith and love are destroyed. In the former
case is life; in the latter, death. As long as it
is not evident (see on 1Jo 5:16, on 'see') that it is a
sin unto death, it is lawful to pray. But when it is
deliberate rejection of grace, and the man puts from him
life thereby, how can others procure for him life?"
Contrast @Jas
5:14-18. Compare @Mt
12:31,32 as to the wilful rejection of Christ, and
resistance to the Holy Ghost's plain testimony to Him as
the divine Messiah. Jesus, on the cross, pleaded only for
those who KNEW NOT
what they were doing in crucifying Him, not for
those wilfully resisting grace and knowledge. If we
pray for the impenitent, it must be with humble
reference of the matter to God's will, not with the
intercessory request which we should offer for a
brother when erring.
18. (@1Jo
3:9.)
We know--Thrice repeated emphatically, to
enforce the three truths which the words preface, as
matters of the brethren's joint experimental knowledge.
This @1Jo
5:18 warns against abusing @1Jo
5:16,17, as warranting carnal security.
whosoever--Greek, "every one who." Not
only advanced believers, but every one who is born
again, "sinneth not."
he that is begotten--Greek aorist,
"has been (once for all in past time) begotten of
God"; in the beginning of the verse it is perfect. "Is
begotten," or "born," as a continuing state.
keepeth himself--The Vulgate
translates, "The having been begotten of God keepeth HIM"
(so one of the oldest manuscripts reads): so ALFORD.
Literally, "He having been begotten of God (nominative
pendent), it (the divine generation implied in the
nominative) keepeth him." So @1Jo
3:9, "His seed remaineth in him." Still, in English
Version reading, God's working by His Spirit inwardly,
and man's working under the power of that Spirit as a
responsible agent, is what often occurs elsewhere. That
God must keep us, if we are to keep
ourselves from evil, is certain. Compare @Joh
17:15 especially with this verse.
that wicked one toucheth him not--so as to
hurt him. In so far as he realizes his regeneration-life,
the prince of this world hath nothing in him to
fasten his deadly temptations on, as in Christ's own case.
His divine regeneration has severed once for all his
connection with the prince of this world.
19. world lieth in wickedness--rather,
"lieth in the wicked one," as the Greek is
translated in @1Jo
5:18 1Jo 2:13,14; compare @1Jo
4:4 Joh 17:14,15. The world lieth in the power
of, and abiding in, the wicked one, as the resting-place
and lord of his slaves; compare "abideth in death," @1Jo
3:14; contrast @1Jo
5:20, "we are in Him that is true." While the believer
has been delivered out of his power, the whole world
lieth helpless and motionless still in it, just as it
was; including the wise, great, respectable, and all who
are not by vital union in Christ.
20. Summary of our
Christian privileges.
is come--is present, having come. "HE
IS HERE--all is full of Him--His
incarnation, work, and abiding presence, is to us a living
fact" [ALFORD].
given us an understanding--Christ's, office
is to give the inner spiritual understanding to discern
the things of God.
that we may know--Some oldest manuscripts
read, "(so) that we know."
him that is true--God, as opposed to every
kind of idol or false god (@1Jo
5:21). Jesus, by virtue of His oneness with God, is
also "He that is true" (@Re
3:7).
even--"we are in the true" God, by
virtue of being "in His Son Jesus Christ."
This is the true God--"This Jesus
Christ (the last-named Person) is the true God"
(identifying Him thus with the Father in His attribute,
"the only true God," @Joh
17:3, primarily attributed to the Father).
and eternal life--predicated of the Son of
God; ALFORD
wrongly says, He was the life, but not eternal
life. The Father is indeed eternal life as its
source, but the Son also is that eternal life
manifested, as the very passage (@1Jo
1:2) which ALFORD
quotes, proves against him. Compare also @1Jo
5:11,13. Plainly it is as the Mediator of
ETERNAL LIFE to us that Christ is here
contemplated. The Greek is, "The true God and
eternal life is this" Jesus Christ, that is, In believing
in Him we believe in the true God, and have eternal life.
The Son is called "He that is TRUE," @Re
3:7, as here. This naturally prepares the way for
warning against false gods (@1Jo
5:21). Jesus Christ is the only "express image of
God's person" which is sanctioned, the only true visible
manifestation of God. All other representations of God are
forbidden as idols. Thus the Epistle closes as it
began (@1Jo
1:1,2).
21. Affectionate parting
caution.
from idols--Christians were then everywhere
surrounded by idolaters, with whom it was
impossible to avoid intercourse. Hence the need of being
on their guard against any even indirect compromise or act
of communion with idolatry. Some at Pergamos, in the
region whence John wrote, fell into the snare of eating
things sacrificed to idols. The moment we cease to abide
"in Him that is true (by abiding) in Jesus Christ," we
become part of "the world that lieth in the wicked one,"
given up to spiritual, if not in all places
literal, idolatry (@Eph
5:5 Col 3:5).
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